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Feb 23rdReading Stage 2: Dogs can understand human feelings

If you ever get the impression that your dog can “tell” whether you look content or annoyed, you may be onto something. Dogs may indeed be able to discriminate between happy and angry human faces, according to a new study.

Researchers trained a group of 11 dogs to distinguish between images of the same person making either a happy or an angry face. During the training stage, each dog was shown only the upper half or the lower half of the person’s face.

The investigators then tested the dogs’ ability to discriminate between human facial expressions by showing them different images from the ones used in training. The dogs were shown either the other half of the face used in the training stage, or the other halves of people’s faces not used in training, or a face that was the same half as the training face but from a different person, or the left half of the face used in the training stage.

The researchers found that the dogs were able to pick the angry or happy face by touching a picture of it with their noses more often than one would expect by random chance. The study showed the animals had figured out how to transfer what they learned about human faces during training to new faces in the testing stage, the researchers said.

“We can rule out (conclude; make conclusion) that the dogs simply discriminated [between] the pictures based on a simple important fact, such as the visibility (the ability to be seen) of teeth” said study author Corsin Müller, an animal behavior researcher. “Our results suggest that the successful dogs realized that a smiling mouth means the same thing as smiling eyes,” and the same rule applies to an angry mouth having the same meaning as angry eyes, ” Müller said.

Previous research had demonstrated (proved; showed) that dogs are able to distinguish between different expressions in people they arefamiliar with (know; have contact with), even if the animals are shown only part of the face, such as the eye region.

At this point, it is not clear why dogs seem to be equipped with (have) the ability to recognize different facial expressions in humans, the researchers said. “To us, the most likely explanation seems to be the life-long co-habitation (living together) of dogs with humans, during which the dogs get a lot of exposure to human facial expressions,” and this exposure has provided them with many opportunities to learn to distinguish between them, Müller said.

So not enough for Jack to know my secret feelings, at some point, he will probably say “let me take your classes, too.’